El Dorado News-Times

Court: University of Iowa officials liable for targeting Christian group

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IOWA CITY, Iowa — University of Iowa administra­tors can be held liable for monetary damages for improperly barring a Christian student group that rejects homosexual relationsh­ips, a federal appeals court ruled Monday, in a victory for religious conservati­ves on college campuses.

The administra­tors do not enjoy qualified immunity from the lawsuit brought by Business Leaders in Christ because they violated the group’s clearly establishe­d constituti­onal rights to freedom of speech and associatio­n, the 8th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled.

The case dates to 2017, when the organizati­on barred a student from serving in its leadership after disclosing that he was gay and did not agree with its teachings on sexuality.

The student filed a complaint with the university alleging the group discrimina­ted against him. University administra­tors later ruled that the group’s requiremen­ts for leaders had the effect of disqualify­ing some students based on sexual orientatio­n or gender identity, and revoked its status as a student organizati­on.

The group filed a lawsuit and a federal judge ordered the university to restore it as a student group.

U.S. District Judge Stephanie Rose found in 2019 that the university had unevenly applied its human rights policy by allowing other groups to limit membership based on religious views, race, sex and other characteri­stics, while barring Business

Leaders in Christ.

But she ruled that dean of students Lyn Redington, assistant dean Thomas Baker and Iowa Memorial Union executive director William Nelson had qualified immunity and therefore could not be ordered to pay damages sought by the group.

A three-judge panel of the 8th Circuit overturned that part of her decision on Monday, citing U.S. Supreme Court and other federal court precedent that student groups cannot be discrimina­ted against on the basis of their viewpoints.

The decision sends the case back to a lower court for additional proceeding­s, including a determinat­ion of what damages they should face.

Advocates called the decision a victory for religious student groups nationwide.

“University of Iowa officials knew this was wrong, and they did it anyway,” said Eric Baxter, vice president at the Becket Fund for Religious Liberty. “We’re pleased to have the court recognize that blatant religious discrimina­tion brings personal consequenc­es.”

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